No, he doesn't. People are so retarded about who the fawn over for positions like this. The VP is a person who's supposed to be able to step in at a moment's notice and run the government. Tucker has no relevant experience at all. In fact, he openly disdains the idea. He'd be an absolutely terrible choice for this job. Do you think he could handle negotiating a treaty with Xi Jinping or Putin? Do you think he could manage a domestic disaster like a hurricane response? Could he usher through a major reform package through Congress? Would he want to do that work? No. No. No. No.
Tucker is a commentator and a very insightful one. Let him do that job for which he has talent, experience, and passion. Don't try and pigeonhole him into a slot like some sort of incompetent football manager trying to come up with a fantasy football team.
Find someone who you'd feel comfortable voting for for President. Someone who could actually run the country, who could handle a crisis, and who does have the passion for bureaucratic and legal reform. Trump's going to be completely overwhelmed and he's going to turf a lot of that to a VP. He's the captain. He needs a good XO.
IMHO: The VP should act like assassination insurance. That the opposition is so afraid of the VP getting into power that they dare not touch the President.
The XO comparison is apt. Also as understudy to the lead role in an opera, able to step in seamlessly if the main player is out of action, continuing with the script. Someone as committed to MAGA as Trump...and that's a high bar.
Before Trump came on the scene, I was tending toward Ben Carson. He and Carson became friends during the primary season. He functioned quietly and competently in Trump's cabinet. He's smart and grew up tough. He's not flashy like Trump, but is quiet and effective behind the stage. I could feel reassured if he were VP.
But Trump would have only 4 years to be effective. There is the lingering question of how to pass the baton, and to whom. Don Jr. might be okay. I have real reservations about any conventional politician. If the goal is to get the country off the addiction to socialism, you don't turn to a political drunkard.
He has to be the VP.
No, he doesn't. People are so retarded about who the fawn over for positions like this. The VP is a person who's supposed to be able to step in at a moment's notice and run the government. Tucker has no relevant experience at all. In fact, he openly disdains the idea. He'd be an absolutely terrible choice for this job. Do you think he could handle negotiating a treaty with Xi Jinping or Putin? Do you think he could manage a domestic disaster like a hurricane response? Could he usher through a major reform package through Congress? Would he want to do that work? No. No. No. No.
Tucker is a commentator and a very insightful one. Let him do that job for which he has talent, experience, and passion. Don't try and pigeonhole him into a slot like some sort of incompetent football manager trying to come up with a fantasy football team.
Find someone who you'd feel comfortable voting for for President. Someone who could actually run the country, who could handle a crisis, and who does have the passion for bureaucratic and legal reform. Trump's going to be completely overwhelmed and he's going to turf a lot of that to a VP. He's the captain. He needs a good XO.
Not quite.
IMHO: The VP should act like assassination insurance. That the opposition is so afraid of the VP getting into power that they dare not touch the President.
He could tag team the Press Secretary job with Kari Lake . There would be no survivors.
The XO comparison is apt. Also as understudy to the lead role in an opera, able to step in seamlessly if the main player is out of action, continuing with the script. Someone as committed to MAGA as Trump...and that's a high bar.
Before Trump came on the scene, I was tending toward Ben Carson. He and Carson became friends during the primary season. He functioned quietly and competently in Trump's cabinet. He's smart and grew up tough. He's not flashy like Trump, but is quiet and effective behind the stage. I could feel reassured if he were VP.
But Trump would have only 4 years to be effective. There is the lingering question of how to pass the baton, and to whom. Don Jr. might be okay. I have real reservations about any conventional politician. If the goal is to get the country off the addiction to socialism, you don't turn to a political drunkard.
Ken Paxton.